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University of Southern California
Vol. XVII
-O’
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965
No. 22
Director
Of ADA
To Talk
• Leon Shull, national director of Americans for Democratic Action, will address the Trojan Democratic Club today at noon in 129 Founders Hall.
Carol Lem. TDC president, expects Shull to speak on ADA’s views on civil rights and the war in Vietnam.
ADA is not a typical left-wing organization, Miss Lem explained.
“It is an organization of progressives, dedicated to the achievement of freedom and economic security for all people everywhere through education and democratic political action,” she said.
ADA conducts a rating service to place individuals on a 100-point scale, depending on their degree of liberal-
ping said. ism.
They rated New York may-oral candidate John V. Lindsay. a Republican, 90 per cent liberal and have endorsed him for the city's top I spcrt.
I “The local ADA office is active in the anti-poverty program and the area of civil Inter - Fraternity Judicial before the council, along with rights.” Miss Lem pointed Council will resume hearings the father of the pledge. out.
today at 1:30 p.m. on an al- All other members and Don Edwards, national leged hazing charge against pledges have been asked u>jchairman of ADA win speak
Karen Desmond: Trustee Scholar
A Hawthorne High School graduate who plans to center her college career around philosophy. English literature and biochemistry has been named a 1965-66 Trustee Scholar.
Karen Louise Desmond, who maintained a 3.94 scholastic average in high school and participated in CISC's Summer Honors Program, is one of the 10 student? selected by the Board of Trustees.
She was student body vice-president, treasurer of her high school class, a member of the high school newspaper staff and a participant in the American Field Service.
Her honors in high school included membership in the California Scholarship Federation and Quill and Scroll. She was the recipient of a Bank of America Achievement Award, the American Legion School Award, the Optimist Youth Appreciation and a National Merit Letter of Commendation.
The Board of Trustees made a nationwide search for exceptionally gifted high school seniors who qualified for enrollment in a new program Reared toward academically superior students. Ten students are selected as Trustee Scholars for each school year.
High school students throughout the nation are invited to apply for the Trustee Scholarship.
Although the program has no relation to financial need, the university is prepared to spend $100,000 a year in hopes of obtaining as many as 40 Trustee Scholars by the fall of 1966. President Norman Top-
r .-.V. V. . . ....................• —— ................................................................
Verdict Imminent On ZBT Hazing
'Salome' Playing at Stop Gap
Rehearing for "Salome," the Experi- Fleming, Dolly S n e I I i ng and Harold mental Theater production at Stop White. The play, along with "Chamber Gap this week, are (from left) Rosemary Music," is being shown through Saturday,
CURRICULUM CHANGE
Zeta Beta Tau fraternity make themselves available if
to TDC on Nov. 17.
lodged by a ZBT pledge last needed, and several are ex-tveek. pected to give testimony to- Councilman Billy Mills will Ray Sparling, chief justice day.__________address the club next week.
of IFC Judicial, said the hearings should end today and a decision would probably be reached sometime in the late Bftemoon.
! The pledge asserts that he and his pledge brothers were taken into the basement of the fraternity house, wrhere: dead fish were hung from
Debaters' First Meet Is Wide-Margin Win
New Breed of Lawyer Seen For Law School
Donation To Aid Communist Study
A $500,000 gift from Mr. and Mrs. Henry Salva-, tori has been given to the Researel Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda.
Announcement of the endowment was made at the fourth annual reception for the institute staff. It is the second such gift Sal-
vatori has presented to USC tion in the area cf competing as part of the Master Plan. ideologies. Two summer The gift, along with funds teacher institutes on C mmu-from business, industry, foun- nism have been held > f! r-dations and the university it- ther interest and broaden self, will be used to continue availability or subject m ter. objective, academic research Visual Studies
on world Communism. The third operation is the
Aids Library use of television and films
It will also contribute to to develop communications improving the library re- and visual education The insources, making institute stitute joined with CBS to findings easily communicable produce the TV film series to students, teachers and the “Communism: Myth Versus public. Reality.”
The institute program is The program originally ran centered around three basic on five major CBS stations operations. and 32 Armed Service sta-
In-depth research and pub- tions. It has been viewed by lications on world Commun- 11 million Americans ism compose the first opera- The institute also has a tion, exemplified by the insti- unique film library on world tute s bibliography of key Communism containing more books on Communism, their than 150,000 feet of f.'m. documentary volume on the Sources for the film nclude Sino-Soviet dispute and some news services captured Nazi 15 biographical studies of and Japanese films. Soviet world Communist leaders. films and sequences tak^n by The institute is also pio- recent visitors to the Soviet neering in teacher training Union, China and otner key and secondary school educa- areas of the world.
Greg Hill Lambastes University Structure
By STAN MKTZLKR were a business corporation Co-Xight Editor rather than an educational in-
The USC administration stitution.
Daily Trojan Photo by Jim Willcockson dominates the students in the ..£T Xonnino- li'-e th
same way the pigs dominated of any , the other creatures in George Orwell's “Animal Farm Greg Hill, journalism senior, said Sunday night at Counterpoint.
Hill is president of Blue Key. chairman of the ASSC Speakers Committee member of Men's Judicial and former editorial director of the Daily Trojan.
In a speech to be broadcast Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. over KUSC, he compared the faculty to the “Animal Farm"
“Dr. Topping, like th- head )rpo-
ration, is a financial whiz.
‘'He did. in fact, save the university from financial r,;n several years ago, ana obvi-
By GREG O'BRIEN
John C. DeBross’s Trojan division.
A totally new breed of law- sizes social policies underly- eminent domain have been sheep, who refused to assert yer will walk out of the USC ing rules of law and the na- added to the law major’s se- a position more controversial Law School one June day in ture of legal decision-making, lections. than chanting a slogan pre-
j 1968, after having been train- and of the social institutions Also, for the first time, no scribed by their administra-undefeated medals in senior ed under a newr curriculum involved in that process- student will be considered for tion. vision. Introduced this semester. a new innovation in legal graduation until he has wrrit- j And the majority of stu-
Rick Flam. Ralph Brown, The new curriculum empha- education appeai-s in the new ten for publication a signifi- dents, he said, closely resem-
sizes that tomorrows attor- curriculurn—a course entitled cant paper in his particular ble Benjamin, the donkey who , „„ „ ge and p:thics. field of interest. This paper is recognized the domination and
College at --—......... how the
ed on them. Los Angeles Saturday with — -------------------- .
University rules and the enough awards to wallpaper bate. John Crum, Chet Actis, an, J30 ^a. y'
California Education Code the Speech Building. Cathy Salveson and Janet Underlying
their necks, flashlights were debaters, who have a habit of
shown in their faces, a blank winning almost everything Mike Davis and Bill Ander
pistol was fired at them and they enter, came home from son were 3-1, and received n^’s Mould be better school- Law_ Language and Ethics.
fire extinguishers were turn- California State College at certificates of excellence. ecl on now the law effects with increased specializa- considered similar to the mas- accepted it in a cynical and
In cross-examination de- PeoPle economically, socially tion, new areas such as race ter's thesis in other university
forbid any activities.
The plaintiff
Gabbert all
all thinking won~ certificates a,30Ut the new curriculum is 3-1 rec- frrm conviction that no law student has graduated as a ‘complete’ attorney,”
relations law, civil rights, and schools.
with
kind of hazing jn season's first tour
nament, the squad won over- excellence
to be heard by the ton‘an n Ce"S Thf' “to junior division. Kalph » '«™Plrte' attorney.” Dr
council today. So far. ten fra- "J^rd Kadd‘d up to eight Lippjn. Ronald Gordon, .^CTnter imented temtty brothers have testified award winnin„ leams out of Melody McLennan, and Kathy ■ e LaW Center- comment .
the tourna- Ross wron certificates of excellence with 3-1 records.
Bert Rush and William Caldwell wrere 2-2. Davana
Coed Gets Award from Clark Cum
ten entered ment.
The Trojans, when debating the affirmative, held the po-
Jody Hokanson
The Clark Gum Merchan-
sition that law enforcement Klor and agencies need more freedom were 1-3. in wire tapping. Oratory
Winning Strategy In individual events, Da-
This proved to be winning vana Klor received a superdising Award was awarded strategy for the topic, “Re- ior rating in oratory for her to sophomore Patricia Salas, soiVed: That law enforcement speech opposing the Free one of their summer em- agencies should be given Speech Movement, ployees. greater freedom in the in- Bert Rush won a superior
She was selected from vestigation and prosecution mark in oratorical interpreta-over 250 students employed crime.” tion for his reading of two
last summer by the Clark jn senior division of the selections on war.
Gum Company in response to debate, squad cocaptains Phil Kazanjian, John President Johnson s appea. Lavid Kenner and Larry Bishop, and Bettina Tabak all for businesses to hire vaca- gtein earned a perfect 4-0 rec- won ratings of excellent in tioning students for jobs or(j for a rating of superior oratorical interpretation, which would not conflict with an(j medals designating their normal adult s employment, urdefeated status.
Her job was promoting five Bettina Tabak and Penny of Clark's flavored gums. Watson also earned 4-0 The award, for demon- marjjS^ superior ratings and
strated conscientiousness and;-----
initiative’’ was announced by /-s j | | | m
James C. Bowling, vice-presi- v^OlOr3GO '«'• II a S
dent of Philip Morris Inc. ^ gitch-in Time
In this day of sit-ins, a
Three Intersections Get New Traffic Signals
resigned manner.
“I am talking not about what I have heard, but about what I know personally,” Hiil ously deserves a great deal
GRES HILL
Blasts Administration
More than ever before, the m, , - TTr,~. , r • -j
, , , £ , The death of a USC stu- The result of this accident
law graduate of tomorrow , . . ■ , . . . . ,
, ? , c , ,. dent last year may be one was a petition circulated must have a sound foundation . r. 1,
r „ ... c , __•__i reason for the recent installa- among students and presenter a lifetime of learning and , TT F
, . tion of three traffic signals ed to Citv Hall requesting a
understanding. ° . ... .- , , ’ . .. curmounted _ bv protesting
near campus. traffic signal at University -urmuuiiLeu uy &
The traffic signals are lo- and Exposition. . „
All three signals are ex- uaI basls‘
explained.
No Way Out
Hill admitted there is probably no real solution to the university's trouble.
‘‘Yet one does not have to accept it." he asserted.
“These problems can be
their existence on an individ-
“This, together with skillful performance of legal service and wise community lead- cated at the intersections of
ership, is the faculty objec- Exposition Boulevard a n d P^ted to be in operation by tive in developing our new University Avenue, Exposi-curriculum,” Dean Evans ^on an<^ Hoover Street and added. Exposition and Parking Lot
Currently, the new curricu- • lum is streamlining and con- On February 14. 1964, Jeff
solidating the existing courses Parker and Ron Ruesch were - !.*«.»,„ n,
, . , » i. r u i 4-u ii at this intersection to the at- the terrible tvrants in Ur-by reducing the number of re- returning from a basketball f.L U1‘V ‘ V r it. • w u ivicm-u,.
quired courses and increasing game at about 8 p.m. They tion of the Bureau of Engl- wells book and the fnencUy. the number of electives. This stepped into the crosswalk at the installation of innocuous tyrants at LSC. permits finer specialization University Avenue and Expo-^e three signa s is a pait o by the law students. sition Boulevard. Ruesch was an overa11 improvement proj-The curriculum also empha- .struck by a car and killed. Iec ____
Hill also pointed to specific
next week, Guy Quinn, asso- members of the USC commu- activities director,
ciate traffic engineer of the nity who have substantiated central district said. hb analogy.
Although Quinn noted that He identified the top levels the death of ‘ the student of the administration as semibrought the need for a signal pigs, distinguishing between
of commendation for this feat.
“Unfortunately, though, he identifies more with corporate interests than with educational interests and principles.”
Hill also pointed to Dean of Students Paul A. Bloland as “an improvemerr over (former Dean of Students William) McGrath, r still an organization man.”
Clive Grafton, the new stu-ivas
categorized by Hill as a man (Continued on Pas;e 2)
said, the administration behaves as if the university
Psychologist Presents Paper on Heart Action
Clark Gum is Philip Morris.
a division of
E! Rod Pictures Should Be Taken
El Rodeo deadlines are nearing for student portraits. Fall graduates can make appointments at («ar-field Studios, 834 W. Jefferson Ave. this week.
Friday is the final day E! Rodeo will accept sororitv proofs. Fraternity pictures will be taken only during the week of Oct. 25.
Pictures of dormitory students can be scheduled from Nov. 1 to Nov. 17 for both men and women. June graduates should not make picture appointments until next semester.
Any student failing to meet the deadline will not ha\e his picture in the El Rodeo.
bunch of nonconformists at the University of Colorado (2.S00 to be exact) decided to be unique.
They held a bitch-in.
The term is rather explanatory, but the whole “bitch” was about the multiversity, and the lost of individuality it imposed on the student.
The bitchers bitched until 4 a.m. about being “folded, stapled or mutilated.”
Specific complaints ranged from philosophical examinations of society and the place of the student in the .world to denunciation of the showers in the dorms.
How does the human heart Cardiovascular Conditioning “learn” the various tasks it in Man" at a meeting of the must perform to keep man Society for Psychophysiologic alive and functioning? What Research at Baylor Univer-
I subconscious involuntary psy-jsity._
■chological factors are involved in determining the 'speed of heart beat, proper blood distribution throughout the body’s circulatory system, and sweat gland activity on the skin?
Prof. William W. Grings,
Newspaper Seis New Schedule
The Daih Trnian will be published >1 o n d a ,v , although that date was not on the original publication schedule.
Instead, there will not be a publication of the Daily Trojan on Monday. March 14.
This will allow the Daily Trojan staff to travel to Newport Beach for the California Intercollegiate Press Association convention. March 11-13.
Professor Installed as Head of Finance Group
Walter Schirra
The list of passengers who ha.ve used USCs new human centrifuge in recent years includes astronaut Walter j Schirra.
DEBATERS MAP STRATEGY — David Kenner (at left), debate coach John De-Bross and Larry Stein discuss plans for
Dr. Kenneth L. Trefftzs, ciation and the Western Eco-professor of finance and real nomic Association. He has chairman of L SC s Depart- estate jn School of Busi- written numerous books and
ment of Psychology, gave negg Administration, has been articles on finance and eco-some answers to these and named the firgt president of comics.
' A^ia- * MM. Dr. Trefftzs working of the Psychonomica So- tl°”; .... . ed "'lth.5'e State Derart' cietv in Chicago last week. The association is composed meat s AID program as a Dr Grinds' paper "Multiple of scholars of finance from consultant to the University Response Comparisons in the academic, financial, com- of Karachi. Pakistan.
Classical Autonomic Discrimi- mercial and industrial com- He is affiliated with Beta nation Conditioning,” is a ^unities, and is geared to 1m- Gamma Sigma, Beta Alpha study of the learning or de- Paving the general under- p3i> Phi Kappa Phi. Artus, velopment of responses of the standing of economic forces and an honorary life member cardiovascular system. wor^- ^ P^3 t0 Pu^‘ of the Lea Angeles PTA
From Chicago. Dr. Grings a quarterly journal Council.
Daily Troian Photo by Mike Kaplan went to Houston, Texas,;through the University of in 1963, Dr. Trefftzs reseason's debate topic. Trojan debaters where he served as a mem- VVashmgton. ceived the USC Dean s Award came back from a debut victory Satur- ber of a panel in a sympos- Dr. Trefftzs is a founder of for excellence in the class-day. The team is highly rated nationally, iium on “Electrodermal and the American Finance Asso- room and the community.
r
»

University of Southern California
Vol. XVII
-O’
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1965
No. 22
Director
Of ADA
To Talk
• Leon Shull, national director of Americans for Democratic Action, will address the Trojan Democratic Club today at noon in 129 Founders Hall.
Carol Lem. TDC president, expects Shull to speak on ADA’s views on civil rights and the war in Vietnam.
ADA is not a typical left-wing organization, Miss Lem explained.
“It is an organization of progressives, dedicated to the achievement of freedom and economic security for all people everywhere through education and democratic political action,” she said.
ADA conducts a rating service to place individuals on a 100-point scale, depending on their degree of liberal-
ping said. ism.
They rated New York may-oral candidate John V. Lindsay. a Republican, 90 per cent liberal and have endorsed him for the city's top I spcrt.
I “The local ADA office is active in the anti-poverty program and the area of civil Inter - Fraternity Judicial before the council, along with rights.” Miss Lem pointed Council will resume hearings the father of the pledge. out.
today at 1:30 p.m. on an al- All other members and Don Edwards, national leged hazing charge against pledges have been asked u>jchairman of ADA win speak
Karen Desmond: Trustee Scholar
A Hawthorne High School graduate who plans to center her college career around philosophy. English literature and biochemistry has been named a 1965-66 Trustee Scholar.
Karen Louise Desmond, who maintained a 3.94 scholastic average in high school and participated in CISC's Summer Honors Program, is one of the 10 student? selected by the Board of Trustees.
She was student body vice-president, treasurer of her high school class, a member of the high school newspaper staff and a participant in the American Field Service.
Her honors in high school included membership in the California Scholarship Federation and Quill and Scroll. She was the recipient of a Bank of America Achievement Award, the American Legion School Award, the Optimist Youth Appreciation and a National Merit Letter of Commendation.
The Board of Trustees made a nationwide search for exceptionally gifted high school seniors who qualified for enrollment in a new program Reared toward academically superior students. Ten students are selected as Trustee Scholars for each school year.
High school students throughout the nation are invited to apply for the Trustee Scholarship.
Although the program has no relation to financial need, the university is prepared to spend $100,000 a year in hopes of obtaining as many as 40 Trustee Scholars by the fall of 1966. President Norman Top-
r .-.V. V. . . ....................• —— ................................................................
Verdict Imminent On ZBT Hazing
'Salome' Playing at Stop Gap
Rehearing for "Salome," the Experi- Fleming, Dolly S n e I I i ng and Harold mental Theater production at Stop White. The play, along with "Chamber Gap this week, are (from left) Rosemary Music," is being shown through Saturday,
CURRICULUM CHANGE
Zeta Beta Tau fraternity make themselves available if
to TDC on Nov. 17.
lodged by a ZBT pledge last needed, and several are ex-tveek. pected to give testimony to- Councilman Billy Mills will Ray Sparling, chief justice day.__________address the club next week.
of IFC Judicial, said the hearings should end today and a decision would probably be reached sometime in the late Bftemoon.
! The pledge asserts that he and his pledge brothers were taken into the basement of the fraternity house, wrhere: dead fish were hung from
Debaters' First Meet Is Wide-Margin Win
New Breed of Lawyer Seen For Law School
Donation To Aid Communist Study
A $500,000 gift from Mr. and Mrs. Henry Salva-, tori has been given to the Researel Institute on Communist Strategy and Propaganda.
Announcement of the endowment was made at the fourth annual reception for the institute staff. It is the second such gift Sal-
vatori has presented to USC tion in the area cf competing as part of the Master Plan. ideologies. Two summer The gift, along with funds teacher institutes on C mmu-from business, industry, foun- nism have been held > f! r-dations and the university it- ther interest and broaden self, will be used to continue availability or subject m ter. objective, academic research Visual Studies
on world Communism. The third operation is the
Aids Library use of television and films
It will also contribute to to develop communications improving the library re- and visual education The insources, making institute stitute joined with CBS to findings easily communicable produce the TV film series to students, teachers and the “Communism: Myth Versus public. Reality.”
The institute program is The program originally ran centered around three basic on five major CBS stations operations. and 32 Armed Service sta-
In-depth research and pub- tions. It has been viewed by lications on world Commun- 11 million Americans ism compose the first opera- The institute also has a tion, exemplified by the insti- unique film library on world tute s bibliography of key Communism containing more books on Communism, their than 150,000 feet of f.'m. documentary volume on the Sources for the film nclude Sino-Soviet dispute and some news services captured Nazi 15 biographical studies of and Japanese films. Soviet world Communist leaders. films and sequences tak^n by The institute is also pio- recent visitors to the Soviet neering in teacher training Union, China and otner key and secondary school educa- areas of the world.
Greg Hill Lambastes University Structure
By STAN MKTZLKR were a business corporation Co-Xight Editor rather than an educational in-
The USC administration stitution.
Daily Trojan Photo by Jim Willcockson dominates the students in the ..£T Xonnino- li'-e th
same way the pigs dominated of any , the other creatures in George Orwell's “Animal Farm Greg Hill, journalism senior, said Sunday night at Counterpoint.
Hill is president of Blue Key. chairman of the ASSC Speakers Committee member of Men's Judicial and former editorial director of the Daily Trojan.
In a speech to be broadcast Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. over KUSC, he compared the faculty to the “Animal Farm"
“Dr. Topping, like th- head )rpo-
ration, is a financial whiz.
‘'He did. in fact, save the university from financial r,;n several years ago, ana obvi-
By GREG O'BRIEN
John C. DeBross’s Trojan division.
A totally new breed of law- sizes social policies underly- eminent domain have been sheep, who refused to assert yer will walk out of the USC ing rules of law and the na- added to the law major’s se- a position more controversial Law School one June day in ture of legal decision-making, lections. than chanting a slogan pre-
j 1968, after having been train- and of the social institutions Also, for the first time, no scribed by their administra-undefeated medals in senior ed under a newr curriculum involved in that process- student will be considered for tion. vision. Introduced this semester. a new innovation in legal graduation until he has wrrit- j And the majority of stu-
Rick Flam. Ralph Brown, The new curriculum empha- education appeai-s in the new ten for publication a signifi- dents, he said, closely resem-
sizes that tomorrows attor- curriculurn—a course entitled cant paper in his particular ble Benjamin, the donkey who , „„ „ ge and p:thics. field of interest. This paper is recognized the domination and
College at --—......... how the
ed on them. Los Angeles Saturday with — -------------------- .
University rules and the enough awards to wallpaper bate. John Crum, Chet Actis, an, J30 ^a. y'
California Education Code the Speech Building. Cathy Salveson and Janet Underlying
their necks, flashlights were debaters, who have a habit of
shown in their faces, a blank winning almost everything Mike Davis and Bill Ander
pistol was fired at them and they enter, came home from son were 3-1, and received n^’s Mould be better school- Law_ Language and Ethics.
fire extinguishers were turn- California State College at certificates of excellence. ecl on now the law effects with increased specializa- considered similar to the mas- accepted it in a cynical and
In cross-examination de- PeoPle economically, socially tion, new areas such as race ter's thesis in other university
forbid any activities.
The plaintiff
Gabbert all
all thinking won~ certificates a,30Ut the new curriculum is 3-1 rec- frrm conviction that no law student has graduated as a ‘complete’ attorney,”
relations law, civil rights, and schools.
with
kind of hazing jn season's first tour
nament, the squad won over- excellence
to be heard by the ton‘an n Ce"S Thf' “to junior division. Kalph » '«™Plrte' attorney.” Dr
council today. So far. ten fra- "J^rd Kadd‘d up to eight Lippjn. Ronald Gordon, .^CTnter imented temtty brothers have testified award winnin„ leams out of Melody McLennan, and Kathy ■ e LaW Center- comment .
the tourna- Ross wron certificates of excellence with 3-1 records.
Bert Rush and William Caldwell wrere 2-2. Davana
Coed Gets Award from Clark Cum
ten entered ment.
The Trojans, when debating the affirmative, held the po-
Jody Hokanson
The Clark Gum Merchan-
sition that law enforcement Klor and agencies need more freedom were 1-3. in wire tapping. Oratory
Winning Strategy In individual events, Da-
This proved to be winning vana Klor received a superdising Award was awarded strategy for the topic, “Re- ior rating in oratory for her to sophomore Patricia Salas, soiVed: That law enforcement speech opposing the Free one of their summer em- agencies should be given Speech Movement, ployees. greater freedom in the in- Bert Rush won a superior
She was selected from vestigation and prosecution mark in oratorical interpreta-over 250 students employed crime.” tion for his reading of two
last summer by the Clark jn senior division of the selections on war.
Gum Company in response to debate, squad cocaptains Phil Kazanjian, John President Johnson s appea. Lavid Kenner and Larry Bishop, and Bettina Tabak all for businesses to hire vaca- gtein earned a perfect 4-0 rec- won ratings of excellent in tioning students for jobs or(j for a rating of superior oratorical interpretation, which would not conflict with an(j medals designating their normal adult s employment, urdefeated status.
Her job was promoting five Bettina Tabak and Penny of Clark's flavored gums. Watson also earned 4-0 The award, for demon- marjjS^ superior ratings and
strated conscientiousness and;-----
initiative’’ was announced by /-s j | | | m
James C. Bowling, vice-presi- v^OlOr3GO '«'• II a S
dent of Philip Morris Inc. ^ gitch-in Time
In this day of sit-ins, a
Three Intersections Get New Traffic Signals
resigned manner.
“I am talking not about what I have heard, but about what I know personally,” Hiil ously deserves a great deal
GRES HILL
Blasts Administration
More than ever before, the m, , - TTr,~. , r • -j
, , , £ , The death of a USC stu- The result of this accident
law graduate of tomorrow , . . ■ , . . . . ,
, ? , c , ,. dent last year may be one was a petition circulated must have a sound foundation . r. 1,
r „ ... c , __•__i reason for the recent installa- among students and presenter a lifetime of learning and , TT F
, . tion of three traffic signals ed to Citv Hall requesting a
understanding. ° . ... .- , , ’ . .. curmounted _ bv protesting
near campus. traffic signal at University -urmuuiiLeu uy &
The traffic signals are lo- and Exposition. . „
All three signals are ex- uaI basls‘
explained.
No Way Out
Hill admitted there is probably no real solution to the university's trouble.
‘‘Yet one does not have to accept it." he asserted.
“These problems can be
their existence on an individ-
“This, together with skillful performance of legal service and wise community lead- cated at the intersections of
ership, is the faculty objec- Exposition Boulevard a n d P^ted to be in operation by tive in developing our new University Avenue, Exposi-curriculum,” Dean Evans ^on an1 o n d a ,v , although that date was not on the original publication schedule.
Instead, there will not be a publication of the Daily Trojan on Monday. March 14.
This will allow the Daily Trojan staff to travel to Newport Beach for the California Intercollegiate Press Association convention. March 11-13.
Professor Installed as Head of Finance Group
Walter Schirra
The list of passengers who ha.ve used USCs new human centrifuge in recent years includes astronaut Walter j Schirra.
DEBATERS MAP STRATEGY — David Kenner (at left), debate coach John De-Bross and Larry Stein discuss plans for
Dr. Kenneth L. Trefftzs, ciation and the Western Eco-professor of finance and real nomic Association. He has chairman of L SC s Depart- estate jn School of Busi- written numerous books and
ment of Psychology, gave negg Administration, has been articles on finance and eco-some answers to these and named the firgt president of comics.
' A^ia- * MM. Dr. Trefftzs working of the Psychonomica So- tl°”; .... . ed "'lth.5'e State Derart' cietv in Chicago last week. The association is composed meat s AID program as a Dr Grinds' paper "Multiple of scholars of finance from consultant to the University Response Comparisons in the academic, financial, com- of Karachi. Pakistan.
Classical Autonomic Discrimi- mercial and industrial com- He is affiliated with Beta nation Conditioning,” is a ^unities, and is geared to 1m- Gamma Sigma, Beta Alpha study of the learning or de- Paving the general under- p3i> Phi Kappa Phi. Artus, velopment of responses of the standing of economic forces and an honorary life member cardiovascular system. wor^- ^ P^3 t0 Pu^‘ of the Lea Angeles PTA
From Chicago. Dr. Grings a quarterly journal Council.
Daily Troian Photo by Mike Kaplan went to Houston, Texas,;through the University of in 1963, Dr. Trefftzs reseason's debate topic. Trojan debaters where he served as a mem- VVashmgton. ceived the USC Dean s Award came back from a debut victory Satur- ber of a panel in a sympos- Dr. Trefftzs is a founder of for excellence in the class-day. The team is highly rated nationally, iium on “Electrodermal and the American Finance Asso- room and the community.
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